"ONE OF THE BOYS.' H la 'way beyond fifty, his hair's turning gny, But still hs can laugh in the jollisst way: Hi haa'n't forgotten the fan in a jest; . . He tell the old atoriea with heartiest teat. He knows all the new ones: he likes lots of nntsfr Somehow he has managed to atay with the boye. Why, he can get up In the gray of the dawn. Ana be out on the road ere the others have gone, With hia pole and his line- and he laughs long and deep At the ones who say moming'a the best time to sleep. He is out with the boys, ana noi one ot them peers Tinkles and crow s teet that tell of his yea At the wrink years. He it ready to romp, or to hunt, or to ride He has never sat silent and moody, and sighed Over vanishing youth or the days of his past, For he saya that the days of the beytime can last Just as long as we will, that we never need part With the wonderful thrill that they give to the heart. He will lie on his back in the shade of the trees And declare that he knowa what is sung by the bees, And he mimics the whistles and calls of the birds, Which, he saya, if he liked, he could put into words. He would rather spend hours 6n the banka of the brook Where the berries are red, than lie reading a book. He is 'way beyond fifty, and folka think that he ought To devote lots of time to more serious thought But they wonder at him, and they envy him, too, For he's living to-day ail the days they once knew; He haa never Tost heart with the chiefest of joys. He has kept a young heart he is one of the boys. , Wilbur D. Nesbit, in the Chicago Evening Post. Sarah Brown's Effort. By ELIZABETH I. SAMUfl., "Present," said Sarah Brown. Then under her breath she whispered, "Six!" Only six more days to hear that name called first. How Bhe hated It! Every time that the roll had been read since the spring vacation she had counted off one. Six days more, and then? She could not. get beyond the Interrogation point and the "then." The other girls there were five girls and Dick Thurston In the class knew what they could do. Helen Burton was to teach school; Marga ret Harvey was going to college; Mary Davidson planned to study kin dergarten, and pretty Gertrude Hall was to be a milliner. Dick Thurston had refused to go to college, so he knew what he would not do. For Sarah Brown there seemed to be neither could nor would. The sit uation was as hopeless as her name. She had time to think this over be fore the roll was finished. Then she shook herself free from her reflec tions aud banished her name to the background of consciousness, while she plunged Into the last oration of Cicero To-day was the day for spe cial examinations by Mr. Thatcher. The minister was always the exam iner; that was a tradition ot the school. It was over at last. Sarah held up her' head with pride as she went out Into the yard. Never had she done so well In Latin as, she had done that afternoon. Suddenly she remembered that she cad left her algebra In the dressing room and went back to get It. She bad put It on top of the wardrobe for safe keeping, and as she stepped up on a chair to get it she heard Mr. Thatcher say, "What do you think of Sarah Brown?" She heard, too, Mr. Raymond's an swer: "I'm afraid she tries to get a little more out of life than she Is will ing to put in." The color mounted to her forehead, her blue eyes flashed and she almost jumped from the chair. The she stepped down, rushed out of the door, and did not stop until she reached the top of the hill behind her father's house. "I'm discouraged," she said, "ab solutely, completely, entirely!" Then her vocabulary and her breath both failed, and she threw herself down under the old pine, that always stood ready to give her the consolation of its shelter. "Willing to put in!" Wus that not the very thing that she wus so un happy about? Just give her a chance! After a little she straightened her self and reviewed the situation. It did not Improve on review. Never bad the sum total of her discourage ments seemed so great. There was only the old housekeeper at home of course her father would not under stand. "I'll go to see AuntPrue," she said. Having reached thlB conclusion she went in to supper. Prudence Hathaway was confl dante-in-general to the village. She said there were two reasons why everybody came to her house; one was because of the .position of her house, and the other was because Bhe was almost always at home. Her cottage stood between the church and the academy, and she was alwaya at home because she could move about only In her wheel chair. That Bhe was not a passive receiver of confidences might have been in ferred from a look at her strong, beautiful face, and evidence of this was not wanting, for Dick Thurston motherless Dick said, "Sometimes ahe'a a regular bar of Justice; some times she preaches you a sermon. You never know which is coming." Sarah's face was bo rueful when she entered the little sitting room that no preliminaries were needed. "All the rest of the girls are going to do Bomething after they leave school, and I've nothing to do but settle down and stay at home. And I wish my name wasn't Sarah Brown!" "Do you think that you would be different girl if you had a different name?" "Yes, I do." "Why not choose one?" atiked Aunt Prue. "Choose a name?" Yea. Fathers and mothers give their children names just to get them started, but we all choose our own names In the end." , "Tell me. Aunt Prue." "If 1 had a name that I didn't like S should establish a synonym." "I'm sure I ahouldn't know where to start to establish a synonym tor Sarah Brown." i "You might start almost anywhero, Barah Brown might be somebody's word for cheerfulness, for lnstuuce ,., "Oh! 1 see." ' "You can't be uure yourself what your synonym will be, but Sarah Brown will stand for something to everybody that knows you." "I think Dick would say that I'm in for the sermon, don't you, nunty?" "What was my text?" "Putting In. I must go now. Good night, Aunt Prue!" A weary head lay on Sarah's pil low that night. The weariness of eighteen may bo as the weariness of eighty, for the tide of life ia greater. Sarah had not been comforted, and she was hardly ready to be urged on. But morning brought courage, and a resolution shaped itself. "I'll try," she said. Then her eye fell on the journal that she had be gun at New Year's. "Make a record of your efforts, Sa rah Brown!" she exclaimed. "If you can't stand for anything else you can stand for effort. Go on, Sarah Brown!" "I wonder what Mrs. Wilson would give as my synonym," Bhe said to her self as she went down stairs. "I think I'll start her on cheerfulness." She smiled rather grimly at the thought. But her smile was pleasant when she went Into the dining room, and she talked to her father a little more than usual. Having made this effort she found horself looking for another, and the result of her search appeared when she told Mrs. Wilson that she would dust the parlor every day. 'Now I'll go over to see Margaret," she said when the last chair was dusted. As she was starting, Mrs. Wilson asked her to do an errand for hor. For a moment Sarah rebelled at tho hindrance to her plan, but she re membered her determination, and an swered with at least a degree of wil lingness. "Looks as If you would have to keep this thing up, Sarah Brown; There's some kind of a law about bodies that can't stop if they once get started. Good use to make of my training in physics, so long as I can't make any other use of It." There were days, however, when she seemed almost to stop, but the record of her efforts served to steady her purpose. One night, as she wrote In her jour nal, "Took cure of the little children at the picnic while Aunt Prue read to the rest," obeying a sudden Im pulse she signed her name, "Sarah Brown." The name seemed to mean something. Margaret asked her once In a letter filled with an account of her own work at college, what she was doing to keep up her English, and she wrote, smiling over It, "I'm doing special work in synonyms." Her chief "effort" during the win tor was an old woman who lived a mile from the village, and whoso un happy disposition offered a special op portunity for conquest. Sarah hud determined to make her smile. Late one afternoon, when she was hurrying home from a visit to this woman, she heard a call for help. Looking toward the river she saw that some one had broken through the Ice. She ran down the bank, and found that It was Dick Thurston. "Help a fellew out, can't you, Sa rah? I'm caught here. Get a fenco rail or something, quick." bhe found a rail, nnd Boon Dick was safe. "How long had you been there?" she asked. "Seems as If I'd been there half an hour," answered Dick, "but I sun- poso I hadn't. I can tell you one thing. Surah Brown, it you hadn't come along I should never had got out alive! " Everybody talked about how Sa rah Brown had saved Dick Thurston from drowning, but Sarah wrote In her Journal ' that night, "Went out and spent the afternoon with old Mrs. Davis. Made her Bmlle." It was some time before Dick was out again. Then he went to see Aunt Prue. He talked to her a few min utes, then went to the window, bo that she could not see his face. "I told father this morning that I would go to college," he said. "How did you happen to change your mind?" "Another result of being nearly drowned. The fact Is, Aunt Prue, that when a fallow 1b up to his neck in cold water, with a prospect ot go ing under, be Is likely to change his mind about many things. They look different." "I'm ever so glad that you are go lug, Dick." But Diok, suspecting that the con veraatlou might become personal, re membered his appointment with the doctor, but he added as ho went: "When you have a fellow that you can't manage, Aunt Prue, just d.own him temporarily. He'll change his point of view. In the spring vacation Margaret called a class meeting. The glrU were surprised when Dick appeared "Heard you were going to talk over experiences," he said, "bo I've come. for I've had an experience." As Barah listened to the other girls she felt that she had little to say, and a touch ot her old discour agement came over her. When her turn came she said, "I've done a little of everything " "Such as saving a fellow from drowning," cried Dick, springing to his feet. "Allow me, ladles, to in troduce Sarah Bro.wn, heroine." "But I never bellbved that you would have drowned, Dick," Bald Sa rah. "It's very humiliating, girls. Sa rah never did make anything of sav ing me from a watery grave. Per haps when I'm on the Supreme bench he'll point to me with pride, and ay, 'I saved the judge from drown ing.' Anyway, I'm going to college, and the cold water and Sarah Brown did It." "See here, Sarah Brown," said Mary Davidson, "I've an account to settle with you. I thought people were going to miss us girls when we went away, but wten I asked mother who took my place in the library, she said, 'Sarah Brown.' I haven't asked about anything else that wo girls used to do that she hasn't answered, 'Sarah Brown.' " "That's so," said Margaret. "I can't see that we've any of us been been missed." "I've only done things as they came along," said Sarah, half In apol ogy, but down In her heart she was glad. Just before commencement Judge Thurston sent for Mr. Thatcher and Mr. Raymond. "I'm getting to be an old man," he said, "and I want to Invest my prop erty In something that will bring re turns after I'm gone. I want to In vest It In lives," he went on Animals Tried For Crime the old academy, and I've decided to establish a fund to send one graduato of the school to college every four years. It seems to me that I should like tho first one to be a member of my grandson's cIubb" the Judge had been watching Sarah Brown "and I want you to advise with me as to who shall be sent." Mr. Raymond looked at the minis ter. The minister said, "There's Sarah Brown." "Yes," said Mr. Raymond, "I don't know anybody who would make a greater effort or do the academy greater credit." "I am glad you both agree with me," said the judge. Youth's Companion. By COUNTESS MAHTINKNGO-CES. AREHCO. The earliest allusions to such trials belong to the ninth century. One trial took place In 824 A. D. The Council of Worms decided In 888 that If a man has been killed by bees they ought to suffer death, "but It will be permissible to eat their honey." A relic of the same order of Ideas lingers In the habit some people have of shooting a horse which has caused a fatal accident. A good, characteristic instance be gan on September 6, 1370. The young son of a Burgundlan swine herd had been killed by throe sows. All members of the herd wore ar rested as accomplices, which was a serious matter to the owners, the In mates of a neighboring convent, as the animals, If convicted, would be burnt and their ashes burled. Justice did not move quickly In tbose times; It was on September 12, 1379. that the Duke of Burgundy de livered Judgment; only the three guilty sows and one young pig (what had it done?) were to be executed; the others were set at liberty, "not withstanding that they had seen the death of the boy without defending him." Were they all alive after nine years? An important trial took place In Savoy In the year 1587. The accused was a certain fly. Two suitable ad vocates were assigned to the Insects, who argued that these creatures had "I love i boon blessed by God who gave them the right to feed on grass, and were? in their right when they occupied I the vineyards of the Commune; they availed themselves of a legitimate privilege conformable to divine and I natural law. The Mayor of St. Jullen hastened to propose a compromise; he offered a pteco ot land where the flies might find a safe retreat and live out their days In peace aud plenty. The offer was accepted. Records ot 14 4 such trials have come to light. THE LAND-LOOKKKH METHOD. THE ECLIPSE OF A LEGAL LIGHT A Tragedy in Business Cards. CONSTITUTIONAL FEDERAL AKD CORPORATION 1'RACTICE ALGERNON P. VAN NUYS A.B. LL.B. (Yorvakd, '06) COUNSELLOR AT LAW 9-11-1S-15 Toplofty Building WORDS OF WISDOM. Remember, people will work tho better because they work from love, not merely doing their duty and obeying in a blind way. Miss Mulock. June SPECIAL ATTENTION UIVEN TO COLLECTIONS. ALGERNON P. VAN NUYS LL.B. ATTORNEY AT LAW 0-11-18 Toplofty Buildino It is great folly not to part with your faults, which is possible, but to try to escape from other people's faults, which is Impossible. Marcus Aurellus. Fidelity is the one quality in which all the world rejoices, and the silent fidelity of the children of God Is win ning dally victories for His cause, where knowledge, riches and elo quence are lacking. Edgar W, Work. AUOUST TVPEWRITINU. PUULIC 'PHONE IN OFFICE. A. P. VAN NUYS Law, Life Insurance and Real Estate Notahy Punnc. tt-11 Toplofty Bldo. Till tho mountains are worn out and tho rlvors forget to flow, till tho clouds are weary of replenishing springs and the springs forget to' gush, and the rills to sing, shall their names be kept fresh with reverent honor, which are inscribed upon the book ot national remembrance! Henry Ward Beecher. OCTOBEll MICHAEL HENNES8Y. AL. VANNESS HENNESSY S VANNESS MANUFACTURERS' AGENTS AUBNTS FOR TH "Uttlk Wosoku" Conuscmcw Fizzlk Has Mantlss Uautok'h Ualm run uuuisaa 9 Toplofty Buildino Since work gives forgetfulness ot self. It can be, and Is, an antidote to I pain of heart. The very routine and , drudgery nf daily work have often saved a life from despair. Adherence to duty is a way to attain some meas I ure of peace. However great the sor row, the needs f living and tho du- ties of living press in, and demand attention. The very necessity is a lesson in faith. Hugh Black. . December -Fhom Fuck. Game nnd Disease. We remember the saying attrib uted to Huxley that tho single ladies ot. Old England are to be thanked for tbu superiority of our beef, be cause they keep cats to destroy the mice that would otherwise extermin ate the bumble-bees that fertilize thu red clover on which our cattle feed. Now some one Is writing to tho Spec tator to propose the slaughtering of I game In the Zambesi Valley in order to prevent the spread ot sleeping slckneBB. The proposal hinges on I what we consider to be the mistaken I statement by Mr. Austen, of the Brit ish Museum, that the tsetse fly can not exist long without mammalian blood. The other step in the argu- i ment Is no more sure namely, that the tsetse fly Is lndlspeusuble to the spread of Bleeping sickness. The evidence Is not sufficient to condemn the game ot even a portion of the Zambesi Valley. The animal that demnnds mammalian blood is, we fancy, far greater than the tsetse fly, and the fact that, unlike the deer, he is capable of writing to the papers must not be allowed to prevail. London News. Reform In Tennessee. "A great wave of reform Is agitat ing the people of Tennessee," said E. E. Boyer, of that State. "The sale of Intoxicating liquors has been banished in all but a few towns, aud it would not surprise mo to see complete prohibition within a few years. The reformers have also been busy trying to eradicate the gambling evil, and thoy were suc cessful In having the legislature pass a bill that strictly forbids any pool selling or bookmaking on racing events. It was thought that this law sounded the knell of horse racing In Tennessee, and so It may turn out, for unless men arc allowed to back their favorites there will be very lit tle interest paid racing in the fut ure. In fact, It Is not practicable to maintain tho tracks unless betting is tolerated."- Washington Herald. The Greatest Indian Organizer. Pontlac exemplified at once the best and the worst traits of the Amer ican Indian. He seems not to have been bo great a warrior as Osceola, nor as able a general In the field as Cornstalk, nor so unselflshly a patriot as Tecumseh. But as an organlzei among a people with whom organiza tion is almost impossible, and as a master ot the treacherous state-craft of his race, he probably surpassed them all. As soon bb his death was known, the French Governor at St. Louis sent for his body and burled it with full martial honors near the fort. "For a mausoloum," Parkman finely says, "a great city has arisen above the forest hero; aud the race whom bo bated with such burning rancor, trample with unceasing foot steps over hie forgotten grave." From "The Conspiracy ot Pontlac," by Lynn Tew Sprague, In the Outing Magazine. - A Puzzles For Postal Clerks. ClevernesB Is one of the attributes necessary for every man who is em ployed in the postofllce sorting mall, for he meets with all kinds ot freaks In the shape of letters peculiarly ad dressed. Some jokers appear to thiuk ; that all the poBtal clerk has to do Is j to solve puzzles. Recently at the Boston office a let ' ter was received addressou "Wood, Mass.," with a line drawn under the i "Wood" -and over the "Mass." The j letter went out the name day It was ! received and reached Mark Under wood, Andover, Mass., for whom It j was intended, and the postal clerk who Bolved the riddle did not think ! ho had one auythlng brilliant. It was all In his day's work. Boston Journal. American Progress. We are going fast upon our way, we people of the United States. We have built higher, deeper, faster tbau ever nation built before. Yesterday we were as a pauper amid ludustrial magnates, calling upon the gold of England for the opening of our mines, our lands, our forests; to-day the banners ot our commercial van guards float above the anows of Si beria, the Jungles of the AmazoD, the forests ot the Congo. World's Work. The Alamo. While the Alamo is situated in the The "Ins. England's new armored cruiser, J, ot Antonio, It is the treas the Indomitable, has been launched, and soon the Inflexible and the Invin cible are to bo given to the waves. Tbu Impossible may be expected next. If there Is anything in names Eug laud is going to cleaTi up the other 1 navies of tho world. St. Louis Re ured property of the people ot nil Texas. There is no Texan who does not posaeis It lu an Interest which he has a sentimental and patriotic right to assert. There will be u gen eral protest and uprising against any scheme to comuMiclalixe any part ot It. Galveston Mews. Every Man Has Ills Own Idea of the Way to Report. Among the mostplcturesque figures of every part of the country In which timber abounds are the tlmber-cruls-ers, or land-lookers men whose pro fession It is to inspect the standing timber and report to their employers the quantity and quality ot the mar ketable wood upon a given tract of land. Their methods vary In differ ent regions. In fact, each man has his own method; but the successful cruiser employs generally some such system as that reported In the Out look as the work of a veteran of the Lake Superior country. When the party had made theii camp, the veteran went out to locate the quarter section post from which he was to make his start. The tract was to be "looked" by sections, and each section by "forties." The post for which ho was looking was in the mlddlo of the south line of the first section. A short distance down the tote road from the camp stood a tree on which was a white, fairly recent blaze, on which some one had pen cilled, "140 paces west by south to quarter section post." Taking a compass from his pocket the old man turned into the woods: and with an eye to the needle rap idly paced off the required distance west by south. It brought him to a fairly clear spot, on the edge ol which stood a very aged beech tree leauing toward tho north, and having the scar of an ancient blaze on tho sheltered side. The cedar post which had onco marked the corner was gone, but this tree was one of the two "witness trees," one each side of the line, with which the original government surveyors had marked the place. The next morning the veteran with his line runner returned to tho wit ness tree to begin actual work. The "forty" was, of course, a quarter of a quarter section, and contained forty acres. The line runner, taking his start from the witness tree, set out, com pass in hand, straight to the north, pacing his distance rapidly but accu rately one hundred and twenty-five paces, or, approximately, three hun dred and thirty feet. Having gone that far, ho made a right angle, to the westward, and, followed by the timber cruiser, set out straight to the west, still pacing his way, and going three hundred and seventy-five paces in a line parallel with tho south boun dary of the forty, and about three hundred and thirty feot from it. Turning then straight to the north, he paced two hundred and fifty paces that way, and then, turning east ward, paced three hundred and seventy-five. This brought htm back again to the east line, up which ho had started from the witness tree. It will be seen that, aB the quarter section was approximately five hun dred paces on a side, ho had come within three hundred and thirty feet of every tree In It a fact any one who will drnw a map of it can verify. Behind him all tho way walked the veteran cruiser, "relieved of the bur den of finding his way, surveying In tently the trees by which ho passed, and making uotos of what the forty would cut. Twenty thousand feet of beech, forty-five thousand of maple, fifty thousand ot hemlock, seventeen thou sand of birch, and one lone pino tree were in the tract. The next forty had a corner run ning down Into a swamp, and there the cruiser found n quantity ot ccdur ties and posts and a handful of tele graph poles, besides some fifty cords of spruce and balsam wood pulp. The third was all hardwood and ran heav ily to in nil a valuable forty. Thus It went on through forty af ter forty. Tho cruiser went over a dozen or more of them every day, and their contents, estimated with acute judgment, wont down in hi? note book, to be reported to t.ie i r pecttve buyer. It la stated that 231 municipal acetylene gas plants are now In use ,n the United States. Astronomers are trying to photo graph the sun's corona without an eclipse, from the Janssen observatory Dn the summit of Mont Blanc. fcWORTH KJOWIN A New York man fell 130 feet and sustained no worse Injuries than to catch a cold. Professor Richard Lull, of Yale College, has published a new geneal ogy ot the horBe. He bas traced tho ancestry of the animal back 2,000, 000 years. He says that while the horse originated in Europe, North America was the theatro for its development. The oldest royal house in Europe is that of Mecklenburg. They traos their descent from Genserlc, who sacked Rome In A. D. 466. The "leafless acacia" Is a peculiar tree that forms forests In Australia. The tree has no leaves, but respires through a little stem answering the purpose of a leaf. The wireless telegraph of the Oer man army can be transported and set up by eight or ten men, and two men operate the station. The apparatus consists of a sixty-foot steel pole In eight sections, with steel guy ropes, a complete Bending and receiving out fit, folding tables and chairs, and a bicycle dynamo that can bo worked by one man. A Washington poultry dealer has made the discovery that It Is a dan gerous practice to carry eggs Intend ed for hatching on electric oars with out taking precautions to prevent tho electric current from killing the germs. Experience has shown that where tho receptacle Is allowed to rest on tho floor of the car eighty per cent, of the eggs oro "killed." Moral: Carry the basket on your lap. The gentle retrain of the accordion ot Phoebe Stannard, of Great Bar rlngton, Mass., calls her cows home, no matter how far on the mountain side they have wandered. Oddest of Maine's animals is the porcupine, and Llnwood Flint, of Waterford, has made them the sub ject of an Interesting nature study. He has twenty or more of them. Thero are some monstrous stonea In the temple of Baalbec, Syria; and the Peruvians had a method of trans porting Immense stones, which nowa days would, If known, moan, a for tune to engineers. An expedition headed by Professor Thomas A. Jaggnr, of the Massachu setts Institute of Technology, will soon go to study the geological for mation of the Aleutian Islands, oft the Alaska coast. The party will Include noted geologists. It Is ex pected that there will be plenty of work, for the Aleutian Islands from a geological point are marvels of pos sibility. The expedition, which is financed by Boston men, la purely a private enterprise. A new alloy, called McAdamlte metal, has recently been put on the market, with the Idea that it may largely take the place of brass in machine-making. Its base Is alum inium, but the exact composition la kept secret. It resembles aluminium only in lightness and non-corroBlve-ness. It la about one-third the weight of brass, but about twice the tensile strength, and Its resistance to com pression Is nearly four times that of brass. It takes a high polish, and does not tarnish. It Is sonorous, an' bells are now made of It. THE SHADOW WOMAN. Milling CasuAlttes. The total deaths by accidents in mines in the United Kingdom in 1906 were 1133, as against 1159 In the previous year, belug a decrease of twenty-six. Under the Metalliferous Mines act tho total number of sep arate fatal accidents dining the yeat amounted to thirty-four, as against forty-three in 1805, a decrease of nine. The deaths caused by these ac cidents number thirty-seven, ns com pared with forty-six in 1905. Under the Quarries act there were ninety two separate fatal accidents during 1906, as against ninety-seven in 1905; these accidents caused ninety seven deaths, to be compared with ninety-njne in tho previous year. Engineer. Harking and lilting. The once familiar practice of In stalling a "barker" in front ot a store to invite the patronage ot passers-by has all but died out. The "barker's' occupation's gone. He has been sup planted by the newspaper advertise ment, which addresses a thousand people to every one upon whose ear Ms solicitations fell, and command) a more attentive hearing. Thero an a few "barkers" left, to be sure, Jusl as there are a few people who keep their surplus money In an old sock Instead of letting It draw Interest iu a bank. But where the barking it most in evidence there is generallj very little biting on the part of the public. Hamilton (Can.) Timos. From Youth to Old Ago There Was the Reflection of Life. Once there was a woman who was a shadow. She was colorless and flat and uninteresting, but she was glad to be a shadow. He paid very little attention to his shadow. When he first noticed her he was quite Interested, and made experiments to verify her attachment to him, such as trying to get away from her, stamping on her, making extravagant gestures for her to fol low, and the like. But when he had satisfied himself that she could not be other than constaut to him ho ceased to notice her at all. Sometimes on his way home at sunset he would glance at her and wonder why sho never seemed to ex ist lu the middle of the day. Some times, in the moonlight, after the work aud pleasure of the day, he would feel the company of her famil iar presence, or In the firelight be would smile at her fantastic evolu tions with something of his old time Interest. For it was by firelight that the shadow was In her glory. When he sat down to rest, before tho blaz ing logs she would dance for joy, throwing but all the fascinations of her nature in quaint shapes and ! rhythms, waving, bending, flickering. till ho covered the fire and sho slipped upstairs after him by the pale caudle light. In public, of course, no one noticed the shadow. She was contented that she was his, and be was used to the fuct that she would always be there, aud society is not lighted with ref erence to bringing out shadows. Finally there came a last time for golug upstairs behind him. He went up weakly, like an old man, and as he spied his shadow trembling be hind him bo stopped to wonder what would become ot her when he was gone. But It was as he foresaw. When bo was carried downstairs, long and still, his shadow followed, long and still, behind him. The Atlantic. Germany's New Kailivay's Hates. The new Gerniau railway passen ger rate is 2.68 cents a mile, tirst class, with no reduction for round trip tickets and no free baggage. For express trains the rates will be high er, causing a substantial addition to the cost of travel. The object is to keep local passengers off tho long distance trains. For second class the rate Is 1.72 cents, with an addi tional charge for baggage aud for ex press trains. The density ot traffic averagos much greater in Germany than lu tho United States. Balti more Sua. 'A London literary critic asks why Cttn lgu$U mote than women. Hot Potatoes as Hand Warmers. Dr. Herbert Claiborne, of New York, suffers from cold hands In win ter. And nothing will warm his fin gers except hot water, u hot fire or a hot potato. He can be seen almost any frosty morning marching along at five miles an hour with a hot po tato In each overcoat pocket and his hands grasping the two big potatoes, piping hot, wrapped in silk handker chiefs, for this purpose. "They will keep your hands warm tor hours un less you happen to sit on 'em," he says. "They are great for a football match or when you go Blelghridlng." Philadelphia Record. That Would Bo Shocking. Sam Bernard was strolling down Broadway the other day, and stopped to watch a derailed trolley. All the passengers were on one side of the track, with the exception of one lady, who seemed to be afraid to cross the rails. When Mr. Bernard drew near she asked. In a timid voloe: "Would I get a shock If I put my foot on that rail?" pointing to the nearest one. "No. madam," answered Mr. Ber nard politely. "Not unless you put your other foot on the trolley, .wlrs.". Yuuus'b Mgaiue. Among the feats performed by the Egyptians was that of erecting obe lisks weighing 400 tons or over. The Romans were also eminent engineers. Near the temple of Baalbec there lies a stone ready quarried, which is seventy feet long and fourteen feet I squar. It weighs 1135 tons. There is now a canal connection between Milan and Pavla. about twenty-five miles long, through an ancient channel, which has been in use for more than 600 years. Thou sands of canal boats from the Po go to Milan every year, pass through the city's canal system, which Is founded on the old defensive moats of the Middle Ages, and proceed northward to the Italian lakes, or vice versa. Every year from R00 to 1200 cou ples go to England from the Conti nent, mostly from Germany, to be married. To comply with the con ditions of the English law the bride usually goeB over first, stays one night In a hotel, and gives notice ot the marriage on the following day. Then tho man arrives and the cere mony takes place. It Is generally by license, as otherwise both would have to stay in England for four weeks. THE PATH OF AN INTERVIEW EK. Cosmopolitan Virtues and Gifts of Versatility Along Its Course. Tho newspapers of Boston are not the same as those of New York; there is a greater difference between those of Chicago and New Orleans; and what Is a "first-page story" in Phila delphia would be moved farther back In San Francisco to make room for another sort of sensation suited to the peculiar taste of its readers. But the subtle distinctions do not perplex the resourceful newspaper reporter. He comes from the Atlantic to the Pacific Coast and In a week his "stuff" is true In tone to the paper that has engaged him. He goes to the East from what is called the "unconventional" West, and in a month his work is in no wise to be distinguished from that of men who have begun and continued In the service of New York dailies. For proof, any important newspaper may bo considered. In five years it prob ably has had scores of reporters, may have had two or three different city editors, and perhaps as many man aging editors, yet the tone of the paper from first page to last Is un changed. !n fact, that distinct, in dividual flavor often persists In spite of efforts to change It. It would be easy to name a score ot papers in the country that are identical In dominat ing characteristics and tone with their Issues of earlier years, in spit of the fact that their owners and the entire staff upon them have changed more than once. The true cosmopolitan is the news paper reporter. It is easy enough to appear content In any quarter of tha globe, and In Rome to live as the Romans do, but the reporter does more. He Is Norwegian nnd Italian, proletarian and palace-wlse, Repub lican and Democrat, sevoral times each day, aud the narrow provincial ism of the metropolis is as much his as the freedom and the long per spective of the mining camp. It is versatility, more of temperament than of talent, that distinguishes him. The citizen of the world, with a nose tor news, a supernatural ingenuity In obtaining It, a pretty knack of description, and the ability to be always In the mood for work, might make un average roporter. The good reporters who become editors have additional faculties, not accu mulated, but Indigenous. San Fran cisco Argonaut. The Stunts of the Agile Log-Man. Skill of an individual sort is pre supposed; Just as is skill lu horse manship with a cowboy. Without It a man Is absolutely useless. And Just as cowboy likes to show off or compete In a kind of horaemansHIp which can have no practical applica tion to his trade, so does the river man do his tricks. A man In Mari nette, whose name I have forgotten, could turn a somersault on a log; Innumerable others like to lie down at length while floating with the currant; Jack Boyd could "up-end" a railroad tie without falling into the water; and It 1b very cold water In deed that can scare off an occasional blrltng match. From "Jack Boyd: Master Rlverman," by Stewart Bd ward White, In the Outing Magaslne. The Press Agent In Wyoming. A gang ot Red Men, dressed as In dians and cowboys, held up a stage la the streets ot Cody last week. It was done to advertise a dance given by the Red i&tin. - Wyoming ls chance.